In a major murder case an innocent man is convicted. Though he is saved at the last moment his sanity is gone and he kills himself. Soon the jurors on his case began to be killed. Newspaperm... Read allIn a major murder case an innocent man is convicted. Though he is saved at the last moment his sanity is gone and he kills himself. Soon the jurors on his case began to be killed. Newspaperman Joe Keats investigates.In a major murder case an innocent man is convicted. Though he is saved at the last moment his sanity is gone and he kills himself. Soon the jurors on his case began to be killed. Newspaperman Joe Keats investigates.
- Director
- Writers
- Stars
Photos
George Anderson
- Wharton Attorney
- (uncredited)
Walter Baldwin
- Town Sheriff
- (uncredited)
Trevor Bardette
- Tom Pierson
- (uncredited)
Brandon Beach
- Detective
- (uncredited)
Al Bridge
- Deputy Sheriff Ben
- (uncredited)
Nancy Brinckman
- Nurse
- (uncredited)
Cliff Clark
- Police Inspector Davis
- (uncredited)
Edmund Cobb
- Police Detective Cahan
- (uncredited)
Danny Desmond
- Newsboy
- (uncredited)
Jack Gardner
- Reporter at Trial
- (uncredited)
Jesse Graves
- Train Porter
- (uncredited)
William Hall
- Officer Garrett
- (uncredited)
- Director
- Writers
- All cast & crew
- Production, box office & more at IMDbPro
Featured reviews
This film, rarely seen on TV, is one of the great over-looked film noirs of the 1940's. Similar in tone to such noirs as the "Stranger On The Third Floor", the movie plays out as a noir-twist on the film "And Then There Was None" with George Macready at his nasty best.
NOTE: Don't read the cast credit on IMDb or this movie won't even be a mystery for the first 15 minutes.
For the first 15 minutes I thought this movie was not bad (not good, but at least a reasonable example of the B mystery movie genre). The problem occurs in minute 16, or thereabout, when the movie starts to telegraph it's punch so clearly that only an idiot wouldn't see who the killer really is, and what the wrap up is going to be. After that you can turn the movie off, except that stopping is like ceasing to watch a bad accident that you know you shouldn't be looking at. Actually, a bad accident is a lot more interesting than this movie.
I won't give away the "surprise". Instead I'll let you participate in the contest to see if you can guess what I was able to figure out by the time of the fire in the mental hospital. It was so obvious that you would have be from Mars to not figure it out.
I like a good bad movie, but this isn't one of those. Try some other movie with "Juror" in the title - any other movie with "Juror" in the title.
For the first 15 minutes I thought this movie was not bad (not good, but at least a reasonable example of the B mystery movie genre). The problem occurs in minute 16, or thereabout, when the movie starts to telegraph it's punch so clearly that only an idiot wouldn't see who the killer really is, and what the wrap up is going to be. After that you can turn the movie off, except that stopping is like ceasing to watch a bad accident that you know you shouldn't be looking at. Actually, a bad accident is a lot more interesting than this movie.
I won't give away the "surprise". Instead I'll let you participate in the contest to see if you can guess what I was able to figure out by the time of the fire in the mental hospital. It was so obvious that you would have be from Mars to not figure it out.
I like a good bad movie, but this isn't one of those. Try some other movie with "Juror" in the title - any other movie with "Juror" in the title.
"The Missing Juror" is worth seeing since it's an early directorial film of Budd Boetticher, so it has some of his great camerawork. The film stars noir actress Janis Carter, Jim Bannon, George Macready, and Mike Mazurki.
A man is tried and found guilty of murder, and then the jurors start dying. A reporter (Bannon) becomes interested in the case - and in one of the jurors (Carter).
The problem is, if you're old enough and enough of a film fan, you'll have this plot figured out fairly quickly.
My favorite part of this film, I have to admit, were the dictation belts which, thirty-plus years after this movie, I was using.
A man is tried and found guilty of murder, and then the jurors start dying. A reporter (Bannon) becomes interested in the case - and in one of the jurors (Carter).
The problem is, if you're old enough and enough of a film fan, you'll have this plot figured out fairly quickly.
My favorite part of this film, I have to admit, were the dictation belts which, thirty-plus years after this movie, I was using.
Breezy B detective movie from Columbia, who made some of the best B movies of the 1940s. Jim Bannon stars as a reporter investigating the murders of jurors from a high profile case. The mystery here is not very compelling. The identity of the killer is obvious from the start. So obvious that I have to wonder if it was even expected to fool the audience. Maybe it was supposed to be a Vertigo type of thing. At any rate, the movie is a fun watch despite the weak mystery. The cast is likable and director Budd Boetticher keeps things moving along quickly. The following year Bannon would rejoin co-star George Macready in the first of Bannon's short-lived I Love a Mystery series.
It looks like an early Richard Fleischer's movie for RKO, or also Bob Wise's for the same studio. But Columbia did the very same for the likes of Budd Boetticher, Edward Dmytryk, William Castle, hirig them for short and fast paced thrillers. This one is excellent as another from Boetticher: BEHIND LOCKED DOORS, that I will comment tomorrow. This topic looks much like the thirties mystery yarns, but here it moves up a gear. Boetticher was a real gifted good director, it also reminds me early Anthony Mann's films, for RKO if my memory is good. Nothing here let us guess this film maker will be a provider of awesome little westerns, starring Randolph Scott.
Did you know
- Trivia'Harry Wharton' was the name of a fictional English schoolboy created by 'Frank Richards' in his 'Greyfriars' stories which starred 'Billy Bunter'.
- GoofsThe juror who has been shot confesses that he was bribed to vote guilty. Nothing more is stated about who did this or why. It sounds as if a plot twist was discarded but they forgot to cut that line.
- Quotes
Harry Wharton: Why don't they hang me? What are they waiting for? Hang me! Hang me!
[He sobs]
Details
- Release date
- Country of origin
- Language
- Also known as
- Mañana morirás
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- Production company
- See more company credits at IMDbPro
- Runtime
- 1h 6m(66 min)
- Color
- Aspect ratio
- 1.37 : 1
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